A SECOND enemy thrust was directed against our railhead and supply base at
Dimapur in Northern Assam. Also threatened was the little town of Kohima, nearly
fifty miles to the south and high up among the Naga Hills. On March 29 the
Japanese cut the road between Imphal and Kohima, and Warren's 161 Brigade flew
from Dohazari to Dimapur, moved by lorry along the main road to Kohima, and
settled into evacuated hospital. buildings.

Lieutenant John Wright, who commanded the detachment of 2 Field Company with
the Royal West Kents, has painted the scene on arrival in Kohima for the first
time. The town lay among the hills five thousand feet above the sea, surrounded
by precarious cultivation on terraced slopes. The villages had been built on
promontories, and there lived the picturesque Naga hill-people, with their gay
blankets, their shell necklaces, and their black hair clipped short and straight
or else tied on top of the head. To those who had just hurried from the bright
heat of Arakan, and before that from the vast emptiness of Iraq and the Western
Desert, this beautiful land of wooded hills hardly seemed to be a potential
battlefield. The way up from Dimapur reminded some, at least, of the road to
Mussoorie, the hill station above Dehra Dun. And it was hard to convince
yourself that this arrival in Kohima was not the beginning of a hard-earned
leave on the edge of the Himalayas.

You saw a village perched on the very peak of a sharp ridge, and built
substantially of timber with red corrugated iron roofs. From afar the Nagas,
with prodigious calf muscles, could be seen trotting up the steep paths, with
their loads supported by a band across the brow. There, too, a pleasant smell of
wood fires lingered on the evening air. Most welcome of all was a nip in the air
as the light of day began to fail, with the promise of the luxury of a night
slept in blankets, without the oppression of a mosquito net.

Brigadier Warren was occupied with the co-ordination of the Kohima defences,
but the difficulties of planning were aggravated by the likelihood of his
brigade being ordered back to Dimapur as Army reserve. It was, however, arranged
that, on April 1, Brigade Headquarters, Laverty's 4th Royal West Kents, 2 Field
Company, I.E., and 24 Mountain Regiment (Lieutenant- Colonel Humphrey Hill) less
two batteries, should form a defensive box at the Treasury in Kohima, which had
already been occupied by a company of Assam Rifles. This plan proved
unsatisfactory: the area was dominated by a. hill immediately to the east, which
was not held in strength; our water supply in the event of Japanese attacks was
most precarious; and the Treasury itself was already adequately garrisoned.

But that afternoon the expected change of plan occurred. The move to the
Treasury was cancelled, and 161 Brigade ordered to return next day to Dimapur.
Here the 4/7th Rajputs had meantime established themselves, while the 1/1st
Punjab (Major Neil M. Brodie) were concentrated along the road between Dimapur
and Kohima at Ms. 16. While the Royal West Kents moved into Dimapur as Brigade
rearguard, the 1/1st Punjab remained under command of the 1st Burma Regiment at
Nichuguard. The rest of 161 Brigade settled around Ms.4, being entrusted with
the defence of the Dimapur base and with counter-attacking inside this base,
should the need arise. To this end Brigadier Warren organized two columns,
"Thunder," comprising the West Kents, and "Lightning," made
up of the 4/7th Rajputs, each supported by a battery of 24 Mountain Regiment.

But the general situation on the front changed next day when the 31st
Japanese Division made contact with the garrison at Kohima and drove in our
outposts. During the afternoon of April 4 Colonel Laverty received a warning
order that his battalion would return to Kohima at dawn on the following day.

The battalion column, with Major Donald Easten's 'D' Company in the lead, set
off at half past six on the morning of the 5th. At intervals they met stragglers
returning from Kohima, some walking beside the road, others packed in speeding
lorries. Several officers whom Colonel Richards, the garrison commander at
Kohima, sent out to meet the West Kents, brought news of the contact battle.
They painted so grim a picture of disorganization and lack of spirit within the
defence perimeter that Colonel Laverty hoped the situation would not have
deteriorated to the extent of a complete collapse before he could reinforce the
garrison. Although the Japanese were already in Kohima itself and east of the
village, the road to Dimapur had not been cut, and fighting was as yet confined
to the first of five hill features on which the defences of the garrison box
were based.

Kohima looked much the same as before. But the Nagas no longer trotted
through the village. Silent was the usual hum of lorries driving down the Line
of Communication main road towards Imphal. Only the roar of the troop-carrying
vehicles that bore the Royal West Kents and supporting arms in this last dash
into Kohima was heard. The deserted hospital with its unhinged doors and the
chaos of abandoned stores could be glimpsed as the column passed towards the
cross-roads where the troops were to alight. At that moment our Field Ambulance
detachment was fired on, and one of its trucks disintegrated with a flash.
Rather than run the gauntlet further, the men behind left the transport and
laboriously made their way within the defences of the town.

As Easten's company drove in past the Indian General Hospital, the leading
lorries were fired upon by rifles in Kohima Village, away to the east. Easten
gave orders to dismount and the men marched the rest of the way to prearranged
positions on a hill by the District Commissioner's Bungalow, the home of Mr.
Charles Pawsey.

By five o'clock the company groups had unloaded most of their stores, and the
fifty lorries had been parked in the shelter of a hill. Much of this transport,
which the battalion had been definitely instructed to keep at Kohima in order
not to block the rest of 161 Brigade, who moved up to the Jatsoma area on the
same day, was to be wrecked in the subsequent battle.

That evening, after a ring which the Japanese had fired spasmodically, the
Royal West Kents took up their positions: 'A' Company (Major J. Winstanley) and
battalion headquarters on Summerhouse Hill; 'B' Company (Major T. Kenyon) on
Kuki Picket; Major P. E. M. Shaw's 'C' Company on D.I.S. Hill; and Major D. F.
Easten and his 'D' Company established themselves between battalion headquarters
and 53 Indian General Hospital. At six o'clock that afternoon four Japanese guns
shelled the whole defensive area for half an hour, concentrating specially on
the D.C. Bungalow Spur. But the night was quiet. And save for intermittent.
shelling and mortar fire, the enemy made no serious attempt to attack.

* * * * * * *

When the Royal West Kents had returned to Dimapur on April 2, it had been
decided that Kohima contained sufficient troops and supplies to withstand heavy
attacks. It was known well in advance that the town was an objective of the 31st
Japanese Division, but it was thought, wrongly, that the enemy would not launch
more than the equivalent of a brigade group against Kohima and Dimapur. In fact,
he sent a full division, whose strength far exceeded that of the assorted
garrison. Apart from the Royal West Kents, its attached Gunners---20 Battery
(Major R. Yeo) of 24 Indian Mountain Regiment---and Sappers of 2 Field Company,
our garrison numbered some 2,900 all ranks. There were the 3rd and 4th Assam
Rifles, one company of the Shere Regiment, the 1st Burma Garrison Battalion,
part of 313 G.P.T. Company, men from workshop, supply, medical, engineer and 'A'
Force units, some signalmen of the Burma Telegraph Company, and soldiers from
the 24th Reinforcement Camp who happened to be in Kohima when the road to Imphal
was cut. Those units that were organized had already marched many miles across
rough country from the Chindwin river, or were generally tired out from hard
rearguard fighting among the hills at Jessami and Kharasom, to the east. And
that part of the garrison which comprised the non-combatant administrative
staffs was later to prove a liability. Not only did the special requirements of
protection and disposal impose an extra burden upon the garrison commander, but
the morale of these men was low and, therefore, dangerous. In many cases, quite
inevitably, the troops had been collected together at very short notice;
platoons and sections were composed of men from several units, under officers
and N.C.O.s. whom they had never seen before; and being men from non-fighting
units, their infantry training was naturally inadequate.

THE WAR MEMORIAL AT KOHIMA

ACROSS THE IMPHAL PLAIN

A PUNJABI DEFENCE POST

If the state of the garrison when the Kohima battle started was not all that
might have been desired to withstand a prolonged siege, the defences had also
been neglected. Vital wireless sets had not been dug in; few or no communication
trenches had been dug before the arrival of the Royal West Kents, although there
had been weeks of opportunity. The water points, exposed as they were, lay
outside the defence perimeter and, consequently, soon fell under enemy control.
Canvas tanks were available, but little effort had been made to construct
alternative water points or to form reserves within the perimeter. But to offset
these shortcomings, the quantity and the dumping arrangements of ammunition were
good, and the presence of the F.S.D. within the defences ensured adequate food
supplies at the outset. Yet, here again, the formation of reserves in individual
sectors had not been completed. On the medical side, no less than five separate
unco-ordinated regimental aid posts were operating when Laverty's battalion
reached Kohima. Some were without stores; others had stores in abundance, but
were not dug in.

This was the position at nightfall on April 5. 161 Brigade Headquarters and
the 4/7th Rajputs had established a temporary defensive box on the hills
outside, near Ms. 42, within two miles of the town, and on the morning of the
6th Brodie's 1/1st Punjab, who had been relieved outside. Dimapur by a battalion
raised from the reinforcement camp there, joined the Brigade and deployed up the
spur towards Jatsoma.

Brigadier Warren had decided not to put the whole of his brigade into the
Kohima box. He had several reasons for this decision: the area within Kohima was
too confined for the guns of Hill's 24th Mountain Regiment to fire effectively,
and they could only operate to the best advantage if two mutually supporting
boxes were established. Warren's decision did much to save Kohima, for the
battery of mountain guns that did go in with the Royal West Kents was unable to
fire, and it was the remainder of the regiment which, tirelessly, night after
night, gave brilliant covering fire to the British battalion. Most of the fire
was called for by O.Ps. in the garrison, with whom wireless communication did
not fail. There were nights when the guns were never silent, one or more firing
defensive fire targets that ringed Kohima. On one target alone, the Regiment
fired some 3,500 rounds in five hours. Nor could the infantry have held out
without this support.

The Brigade had so great a quantity of transport laden with ammunition and
supplies that it would have been impossible to find room for these within the
perimeter of Summerhouse Hill. These supplies had either to be protected outside
the Kohima perimeter, or sent back to Dimapur. Warren decided to protect them,
and accordingly established the Jatsoma box. This box relieved some of the
pressure on Kohima by drawing upon itself attacks from which the enemy suffered
as many casualties as he did on Summerhouse Hill during the actual siege. It was
intended that power of manuvre should be given to the main part of 161
Brigade. But, owing to the strength of the Japanese, the 1/1st and 4/7th were
fully occupied in defending 24 Mountain Regiment so that the Gunners in turn
could assist the Royal West Kents by fire.

* * * * * * *

From 5 a.m. until 11 a.m. on the 6th, Jail Hill and G.P.T. Ridge were heavily
shelled and mortared. The jail buildings were rapidly hit, and the crest and
forward positions of the 1/3rd Gurkha Rifles under Captain Frew suffered
severely. Both British officers with the Burma Rifles were killed, and many
casualties had to be sent down to Summerhouse Hill.

At half past ten, by which time the Japanese had infiltrated steadily on the
left flank, the ninety Gurkhas remaining on G.P.T. Ridge withdrew to Jail Hill.
There were not enough trenches for them, and few of these trenches had overhead
cover. Half an hour later the Burma Rifles were forced off Jail Hill, and
withdrew towards the F.S.D.

When Jail Hill was captured, Colonel Laverty ordered Easten's 'D' Company up
from near the hospital to retake the position. But Easten's men found the
Japanese too firmly established to be dislodged by anything less than a
full-scale attack. And as the casualties that this might incur could not be
afforded, Easten was ordered instead to reinforce F.S.D. Hill. During that
morning 'A' Company of the 4/7th Rajputs, commanded by Captain Mitchell, joined
the garrison, came under Laverty's command, and took over the positions just
vacated by 'D' Company. They had been sent into Kohima by Brigadier Warren to
ensure that the road was still clear and to gain touch with the defenders. But
this road to Dimapur was cut behind the Rajput column, although small patrols
continued for a time to move in and out with messages.

When the road was finally blocked, all evacuation of casualties from Kohima
became impossible. The telephone cable back to 161 Brigade Headquarters lasted
through for six hours more. Then the enemy cut it, and all communication was by
wireless.

It was fortunate that the siege began with the dressing stations almost
empty; they did not remain so for long. And it was at this stage, when desultory
shelling had proved how inadequate and poorly protected were the garrison's
medical arrangements, that Lieutenant-Colonel John Young, commanding 75 Indian
Field Ambulance, arrived in Kohima by a circuitous route. His arrival was indeed
a blessing. At once he organized with devoted energy the centralization of
medical stores for the entire garrison. And parties of non-combatant Indians
were set digging trenches to protect our wounded from the worst of the
shell-fire.

When night fell on April 6 a company of Japanese attacked frontally in an
attempt to cross the main road from Jail Hill to D.I.S. Hill, held by Shaw's 'C'
Company of the Royal West Kents. While our mortars caused many casualties in the
enemy's forming-up areas and on Jail Hill, men of 'C' Company killed scores of
Japanese in the open. One strong attack was driven back. But under cover of the
dark night an enemy platoon succeeded in infiltrating around the west flank into
some bashas and pits between 'C' and 'D' Companies of the West Kents.
Major Shaw was seriously wounded, and two hours later his second-in-command was
hit.

When dawn broke the situation was grave. Something must be done to restore
it. Accordingly, Laverty ordered Easten's company to destroy the Japanese who
had infiltrated. This counter-attack succeeded.. But it was rendered the more
hazardous by enemy guns only a thousand yards away on G.P.T. Ridge which fired
direct into the flank of our advancing troops. The detachment of Sappers,
commanded by Lieutenant J. W. Wright, supported Easten by demolishing the brick
walls of several bashas in which the Japanese, and some Indians, whom
they had captured, were hiding. At one moment, some of the enemy soldiers took
shelter in brick ovens: they were forced out by grenades. Others sheltered in an
ammunition dump and in the D.I.S. Hospital stores. Their choice of refuge was
ill-fated, as during the fighting both these caught alight. The confusion of
battle was not lessened when a burning basha set this ammunition dump
exploding. Easten's men did not fail to shoot down the Japanese like rabbits
bolting from a haystack. Fierce hand-to-hand fighting also occurred. Many
wounded Japanese fled into a nullah on the western side, and after the fighting
died down forty-four enemy bodies were counted on the ground. Then Major Easten
led his men across to reinforce Shaw's 'C' Company's position, while the Rajput
Company took over the defence sector that had been retrieved in this engagement.

The next night a Rajput platoon, using a route across country north of 53
Indian General Hospital, succeeded in escorting out of Kohima, to Ms.41, eighty
of our walking wounded and a hundred non-combatant Indian troops. The road from
Dimapur to 161 Brigade area was still open. Supplies had been coming in and
ammunition reserves were being built up as fast as possible, for it was expected
that the road would be cut at any moment. During the night 'C' Company heard the
Japanese forming up for an attack. Defensive fire was called for by wireless
from the 24th Mountain Regiment, whose guns were outside near Jatsoma, and the
attack was dispersed. On the previous night Major Yeo's mountain battery, the
only one inside Kohima, had moved two of its 3.7-inch howitzers to the top of
Summerhouse Hill, but only on one occasion was it possible to fire the guns from
this cramped and wooded space, which was under constant enemy observation. And,
later, these two howitzers had to be abandoned.

On April 8 Brigadier Warren moved his headquarters to higher and more
defendable ground. The necessity of defending many vehicles, ration dumps, and
gun areas had caused 161 Brigade to become extended. One result of this
closing-in move was that Warren was enabled to release part of the 1/1st Punjab,
in the hope that these troops might be able to open the road into Kohima. A
further reason for moving was the reports from escaped prisoners and from one of
our patrols, indicating that a serious threat to the Brigade's right flank might
develop from the direction of Khonoma.

By eight o'clock that morning, too, the telephone line to Dimapur had been
cut, and a carrier patrol of the 1/1st, which drove back ten miles to Zubza,
reported that the road had been blocked. Thus, both the garrison of Kohima and
Warren's defensive box were surrounded by the enemy. During that day the
Japanese installed 75 mm. guns along the ridge south of Kohima village towards
Merema, and their artillery on G.P.T. Ridge was reinforced by anti-tank guns. In
this way, our garrison was now exposed to direct fire from east, south and west.

And at dusk Kohima was shelled by all these enemy guns together. This
concentration coincided with a really. ferocious Japanese attack from Jail Hill
against the thin line of 'C' and 'D' Companies. The attack was repulsed, as were
two others that followed. Major Donald Easten was wounded. And Lance-Corporal J.
Harman died performing the acts of high gallantry for which he was posthumously
awarded the Victoria Cross. Many a faint heart was inspired by his sacrifice,
and urged to fight on with renewed determination. By this time our two companies
had inflicted about five times their total strength in casualties on the enemy.

That same night the Japanese attacked from two other directions ---from D.C.
Bungalow and 53 Indian General Hospital Spurs---and obtained footholds in both
these areas. Our mortar fire, which was successful in helping to repulse the
attacks on 'C' Company, drew counter-battery fire by the sparks of the charge
which were clearly visible to the enemy in the darkness.

This fighting in the hospital area made the garrison's medical and water
problems still more acute. No longer could walking wounded be evacuated across
country. No place within the perimeter lay out of enemy observation or fire. And
the number of stretcher cases had greatly increased. The one small water tap in
the District Commissioner's garden was now little more than thirty yards from
the enemy positions, and our men had to crawl forward singly at night to fill
their bottles. Although four days later another water point was found near the
Hospital, this, too, could only be used by night. So desperate had the water
situation become that it was rationed to half a mug a day for each man.
Subsequently, when the water was supplied by air, the garrison had just enough
for drinking and for the more urgent medical purposes.

Unforgettable to those who, endured the siege of Kohima was the District
Commissioner, Mr. Charles Pawsey, who had spent a score of years among his
beloved Naga hill-men. He lived mainly with Colonel Richards, the garrison
commander, in a large bunker on Summerhouse Hill, and was to be seen wandering
through the thick of the fighting, dressed in grey flannels and an old trilby
hat. He encouraged his Assamese and Nagas, and provided a fine example of a
British Empire administrator's devotion to duty, and to his charges.

Day by day Pawsey watched his bungalow home shelled and ruined, till nothing
was standing of what had been a pleasant, rambling, red-tiled house with walls
of asbestos sheeting. Its terraced garden had been gay with flowers. Little
paths wound up the hill behind to a summerhouse at the end. And his private
asphalt tennis court became the No-Man's-Land of a battle. The Royal West Kents
held trenches along its upper edge, and before long the Japanese had burrowed
their way into foxholes on the lower side. There were nightly, then daily, and
in the end almost hourly grenade and rifle duels fought across the width of this
court, without a decision for either side.

During the morning of April 9 the Japanese reinforced their hold at D.C.
Bungalow Spur. Supported by the usual artillery fire, they made further limited
attacks from the Hospital. Although this area was not cleared of enemy troops,
heavy mortar fire and onslaughts by the Assam Rifles did relieve pressure.

Meanwhile, outside Kohima, the 1/1st Punjab had moved to the east of Jatsoma
and had attacked southwards along a ridge. But lines of enemy bunkers blocked
their path, and during the day's fighting the battalion suffered twenty-five
casualties Though counter-attacked that same evening, they held the ground they
had gained.

As the dusk enveloped Kohima, heavy shelling coincided with a rainstorm and a
strong enemy attack from beyond the Bungalow. A fierce charge, accompanied by
shouts and yells, was beaten off by Winstanley's 'A' Company, supported by
defensive fire from the Mountain Gunners, who took a heavy toll. This first
attack, on a pitch-dark night, was repulsed. But the Japanese again probed from
the Hospital towards the Assam Rifles, and made a third and most dangerous
thrust directed at the West Kents' now seriously depleted 'C' Company. Under
cover of showers of grenade-discharger bombs, the enemy gained a definite
footing in the trenches in D.I.S. Hill, that could not be manned because of our
casualties.

Next day, April 10, Colonel Laverty decided that a counter-attack to regain
the lost ground stood little chance of success; the fighting reserve remaining
in the garrison was small; severe casualties could not be afforded. Accordingly,
plans were made to shorten our perimeter by withdrawing 'C' Company to the
F.S.D., by destroying the stores in the huts on D.I.S. Hill, by booby-trapping
the approaches to the F.S.D., and by altering the defensive fire tasks of the
Mountain Gunners to fit our new defence lines. During the night 'C' Company was
successfully withdrawn through the Rajputs. But all this time the Japanese
maintained pressure with great strength and tenacity along the two main
approaches on which they concentrated throughout the siege: their thrusts from
D.I.S. Hill towards the F.S.D. and also from Pawsey's Bungalow.
Grenade-discharger fire was used in profusion, and in one mortar concentration
the Japanese put down a hundred bombs in ten minutes on the small area between
Laverty's command post and Young's dressing station.

April 11 was a quieter day. The Kohima garrison had hopes that Brigadier
Warren, operating outside, would be able to relieve enemy pressure. 161 Brigade
was now under command of Major-General Grover's 2nd British Division that had
been hurried to Dimapur from India. Its 5th Brigade, fighting its way south, was
now within ten miles of Kohima. The 1/1st Punjab carrier platoon moving along
the road from the west side of the Jatsoma box had been ambushed on the 10th.
And next day Major T. S. Ware's 'B' Company, after successfully attacking a
party of enemy on the outskirts of Jatsoma village, was twice counter-attacked,
but resisted hard pressure throughout the day. The sepoys held their ground.

First light on April 12 brought against Kohima yet another Japanese attack,
this time against the Rajput company near the F.S.D. This onslaught was repulsed
and twenty-eight enemy bodies later found, but Captain Mitchell, who commanded
the company, was killed in the engagement.

* * * * * * *

Enemy mortaring, in particular from Jail Ridge, had by now made our casualty
position critical. Stretchers were scarce, the stretcher-bearers and doctors had
suffered casualties, and in the small area of our advanced. dressing station
barely enough room remained for the lying cases.

The wounded, tended with the utmost devotion and courage by Colonel Young and
his team of doctors, by the Indian orderlies of the Field Ambulance detachment
and by the men of the West Kents' medical section, were pathetic. Sniped,
shelled and mortared as they were in their all too shallow trenches, many were
killed, or wounded a second time. Some lay in individual trenches, and some in
pits that held half a dozen wounded soldiers. The small operating theatre, which
was to receive two disastrous direct hits, lay in an open dugout, covered by a
tarpaulin. Here John Young and his surgeons, whose numbers dwindled as the
result of shelling, carved, chopped, hacked, stitched, and healed men. And they
gave of their best to cheer them and inspire them, even when the days and nights
seemed black beyond compare.

The position near the edge of Colonel Laverty's perimeter, on the slopes of
Summerhouse Hill, was terribly exposed. The wounded could watch the Japanese
loading shells into their mortars, and they could hear the mortar shells landing
close beside them. They listened to the shelling and the screaming. They watched
bombs dropping from hostile aircraft, and parachutes swaying down with precious
supplies. Many died of gangrene, and a few of despair. Burial of the dead was
almost impossible, and the smell of rotting corpses became hideous towards the
close of the siege.

In the words of Donald Easten, who had commanded 'D' Company: "Many of
the wounded I feel sure died in the last few days because they had given up
hope. Yet they were incredibly cheerful, outwardly, up till the end. Those who
were not wounded were too busy to think much, except perhaps at night, just
before the time due for the evening hate, when they wondered whether their turn
would come tonight." From the moment when the enemy launched his first
attack of each evening against some part of the thinly held perimeter, the night
was rendered horrible, laden with noise and fear and blood. And not a man among
the defenders but prayed for the break of day and some measure of relief from
the dread of this war in darkness.

With nightfall the feeling of isolation increased. There was often neither
telephone nor wireless by which to communicate with adjoining positions, and
attention became concentrated upon the strip of ground before your own small
sector. In nearly every case this took the form of a steep slope that ended in a
pool of darkness.

Out of this, records John Wright, seemed to come a commotion of Japanese
voices raised in argument. Such sounds of apparent altercation amazed the
hearers, and exploded the myth of the Japanese superman noiselessly sneaking up
to our positions. You could almost sense a degree of confusion among the enemy
as he formed up to attack. And the crump of 3-inch mortars from the Royal West
Kent support company and the shells from the mountain guns sailing over to bring
defensive fire restored a feeling of security that tided over the anxious
defenders.

In the early morning nerves became tensed again. The Japanese trick of
lobbing grenades up to our trenches usually brought forth a fusillade of
small-arms fire. Whole magazines of Bren ammunition went streaming off into the
dark at no particular target. As soon as order had been restored, frenzied
shrieks from another quarter told that an attack was coming in elsewhere, and
the commotion would again increase.

It was fortunate that our men were not short of ammunition. Perhaps the most
eventful period of an eventful and harassing twenty-four hours was this early
morning. After a night of confusion and, possibly, a dawn. assault, there were
many tired and curious eyes peering out of trenches to observe any changes that
had occurred during the night. Great boughs of trees felled by gunfire might
alter the scene. Up on the hillock to your left, where earlier a fight had been
seen by the light of a burning basha, a flow of British profanity now
proclaimed to the general relief of all within earshot that they were still
among friends. Though secure to your front, an air of uneasiness prevailed,
until it became known how much ground, if any, had been yielded in your rear.

But, welcome though the daylight was, it was far more dangerous to move about
by day than in darkness. As the trees gradually disintegrated under shell fire,
so our troops became more and more exposed. And the consequent development of
crawl trenches seemed to leave scarcely one patch of ground that had not been
dug up.

Major P. E. M. Shaw, who lay for days among the wounded, recalls with
admiration the untiring efforts of Colonel Young and his assistants, whose work
was beyond praise. Young was awarded a D.S.O. for his outstanding conduct. Food
was brought to the wounded by night, and in daylight Shaw had in his little
trench a tin of biscuits and another of tomato soup, which when empty he used
for another purpose. The wounded were kept going by the heartening tales brought
round by the padre and others who could spare time to visit them. The officers,
from whom pistols had been removed when they were first carried in on
stretchers, insisted on having their weapons back; some, at least, had decided
in the long hours and days of anxiety and fear that, if badly wounded again,
they would shoot and be finished with it all. All day and all night they lay and
watched and waited. They could talk to those in neighbouring trenches, they
could watch the guns firing from outside Kohima, and the tanks of 2 Division
some distance down the road. It often happened that those who carried food and
drink round from trench to trench were sniped and killed.

Shaw has told how he tried to read a volume of Shakespeare, but could not
concentrate on the reading of it. When Randolph, padre of the Royal West Kents,
came to see him one day he lent him a Bible, and this Shaw found much simpler to
read, against and within the turmoil and restless fury of a battle that raged
ever closer from day to day. As the perimeter shrank, so the position of the
wounded became more precarious. On the last day of the siege a British private
fell into Shaw's trench. He apologised, when Shaw asked with magnificent
patience and restraint what was the reason of this abrupt arrival. The man had
come to take up a firing position, so restricted had the outer line of our
defence now become.

Water and medical stores were scanty. Indeed, it was only when Colonel Young
led an unarmed carrying party through the enemy lines one night to reach some
trucks abandoned in the open that sufficient blankets were obtained for the
wounded. Laverty was obliged to ask Brigadier Warren, with whom wireless
communication remained good throughout the siege, to arrange air supply of
medical stores, water, and certain types of ammunition, in particular grenades.

* * * * * * *

The superstition of date was justified, for April 13 became known to the
garrison as "the black13th." This title was due to three main
misfortunes that befell the defenders of Kohima. They suffered more than usually
heavy mortaring and sniping during daylight, and Young's medical dressing pit
received two direct hits. The first supply dropping, apart from one sorely
needed pannier of medical stores, was a failure. Despite frantic Very light
signals from the West Kents, three entire plane-loads, including 3-inch mortar
ammunition, were dropped on the enemy. The full consequences of this dismal
sight---urgently needed supplies falling into enemy hands---were realized when
our own troops were later bombarded with their own mortar ammunition.

And what of the third misfortune that day ? After 'A' Company of the Rajputs
had been reinforced at the F.S.D., an attack was put in by one platoon of the
Assam Rifles. But when our men came under machine-gun fire from G.P.T. Ridge,
they were forced to return before their objective was reached. As a result, the
enemy was left with positions thirty-five yards from the crest of the hill,
while his guns could still fire directly into our own trenches on the forward
slopes. The night that followed, far from being quiet, was rent with bitter
fighting. When, at the F.S.D., the Rajputs were forced from their trenches by
direct hits from 75 mm. guns opposite, Major Winstanley had to send forward one
platoon from his 'A' Company at Kuki Picket to save the front positions. Their
place at Kuki was taken by the platoon of Assam Rifles whose attack had been
broken up during the day. On 'B' Company of the West Kents the Japanese made a
heavy rush attack from the D.C. Bungalow. When one of our Bren guns jammed,
enemy soldiers succeeded in penetrating into the shade of a small and important
hillock. Lieutenant King, the forward platoon commander, restored the situation
by driving them out with grenades, but not before the Bren gunner himself had
picked up a shovel and with it attacked his Japanese assailants.

Throughout April 14 the enemy continued to fire his mortars and from time to
time smoke bombs landed in our positions. 'A' Company, who near Pawsey's
Bungalow had repulsed yet another attack early that morning, were replaced by a
company of the Assam Rifles, and took over a less active position north-west of
the Hospital.

The war diary of the Royal West Kents comments here: "This was the
fourth occasion on which, after statements by the relieving forces that they
hoped to make contact on the morrow, hopes of relief, reinforcement, or
evacuation of casualties were dashed."

As the days wore on, each one with its rumour of relief, it became a sort of
grim joke that tomorrow they really would be relieved. But tomorrow never seemed
to come. 161 Brigade had so far cleared the spur running forward from Jatsoma to
Ms.41. Five Brigade, led by the Cameron Highlanders, had driven back Japanese
opposition at Ms.38. Next day, the 15th, when both brigades made contact, the
Jatsoma neighbourhood was found to be clear of enemy troops.

Meanwhile, in Kohima itself, the defenders had spent their first night
without a large-scale attack. The enemy had spent the day shelling 'A' and 'C'
Companies by the F.S.D., and the fresh casualties only served to increase the
terrible congestion in the dressing station. That afternoon a patrol from the
4/7th Rajputs managed to sneak into Kohima and gain touch with Laverty's
headquarters. No Japanese had been seen on the way, and although the main road
was still blocked, this patrol was able to return before dark.

A quiet night followed, apart from several local probing attacks and
intermittent harassing fire. April 16 saw the occupation by the 1/1st Punjab
(now commanded by Warren's former Brigade Major, Lieutenant- Colonel E. H. W.
Grimshaw, who had taken over from Major N. M. Brodie) of unoccupied Japanese
positions on what were known as Punjab Ridge and Picket Hill. At the same time,
Five Brigade relieved the 1/1st Punjab in the Jatsoma box. And by the following
day Cargill's 4/7th Rajputs had also been relieved by the incoming British
division. Now Brigadier Warren had both his Indian battalions free to open the
two miles of road between Jatsoma and Kohima.

But, meanwhile, the weary defenders had been making overoptimistic
preparations for evacuating the wounded. This was due both to messages received
and to observation that our troops were fighting on the main road north-west of
the town. The supply drop of water, rum, grenades, and ammunition was
successful, though a very difficult operation, for our pilots had now to drop
the stores into an area that was only some eight hundred yards long and three
hundred yards wide.

It was estimated that the Royal West Kents had so far suffered two hundred
casualties, of which number forty-five had been killed. Many who were not listed
as casualties had in fact received slight wounds and heavy shocks from the
shelling. And a number of the less seriously wounded had returned to their
companies, because the A.D.S. was already overflowing with stretcher cases.

That night, April 16/17, was particularly dark, foggy, and wet.

The Japanese took advantage of the weather and attacked from Pawsey's
Bungalow. At first their efforts were in vain, but towards morning heavy
pressure brought the enemy troops towards the top of F.S.D. Hill, thus gaining
some ground that the defenders could ill spare. Having had no water with which
to wash or shave since April 5, and an almost negligible amount of sleep or
rest, they were extremely weary. But 'A' and 'C' Companies at the F.S.D. were,
on the 17th, relieved by the Assam Rifles, who were able to retake a few
trenches both in this area and near the Bungalow. 'A' Company returned to its
original positions just south of Summerhouse Hill, which by now could scarcely
be called a rest area. Although not subject to direct enemy pressure, it had for
some days past been under as heavy fire as anywhere else in Kohima.

The thirteenth night of the siege brought further disasters upon the
garrison. The enemy put down a concentrated barrage on F.S.D. Hill. Our
exhausted troops holding this feature drew back. The Japanese were not slow to
exploit this withdrawal, though only in small numbers. Our troops could not be
rallied to make a counter-attack, and 'D' Company of the West Kents, at Kuki
Picket near by, peering into the darkness, began to be affected by the confusion
of their neighbours. The Company Commander was wounded, and C.S.M. Staines,
M.M., who had already been blinded in the fighting but had refused to go back
for treatment, was killed. As a result, 'D' Company was forced under pressure to
draw back. And many good men were lost in this onslaught. One could hear the
yelling Japanese, the screams of the wounded and dying. And our wounded men
lying in darkness on Summerhouse Hill must have wondered whether the enemy,
successful at last, would try to carry the main hill that night. It was
fortunate that this time the enemy, though less than one hundred yards from
Summerhouse Hill and Laverty's command post, failed to exploit his success.
Doubtless the stout resistance by the remnants of 'C' and 'D' Companies and the
defensive fire brought down on our abandoned positions by 24 Mountain Regiment
had inflicted severe casualties.

April 18 was the last day of the siege of Kohima. Grimshaw's 1/1st Punjab,
supported by tanks, cleared the road up to 53 Indian General Hospital, and
joined the garrison.

It was about ten o'clock in the morning that Major Ware's company filed up
from the road, picking its way through the dead of three nations. "We
must," records Easten, "have presented a strange spectacle. Bearded,
filthy men with glazed eyes, who had not slept for fourteen days---we all slept
a little, I suppose, but mainly standing up. Wounded, with filthy bandages and
pale, grey faces, and weak but cheerful grins. The entire hillside was
pockmarked with trenches, the trees shattered by shell fire and festooned with
parachutes."

But however strange, the siege was over, the isolation relieved, new strength
added to the dwindling, weary garrison. And the old comradeship between British
and Indian soldier was heartening; the battered hillside rang with shouts of
"Shahbash, Royal West Kents !" from the Punjabis, and "Good old
Johnnie, everything teak hi now, eh !" from the British..

Over three hundred wounded and some two thousand noncombatant troops were
evacuated. Enemy snipers were active throughout the day; and during the
evacuation of our wounded still further casualties were caused by enemy mortar
and shell fire directed at the ambulances. Colonels Laverty and Grimshaw made
readjustments in the shrunken, overcrowded perimeter, and the 1/1st took up
positions on Hospital Ridge.

More non-combatants, and the Shere Regiment, were evacuated next day. The
supply dropping on a now tiny plot of scarred ground continued to be accurate,
though several men were struck when certain packages dropped either without a
parachute or with an unopened one.

During the night of April 19 two enemy attacks from near the Bungalow,
supported by grenade-discharger fire, had to be repulsed, and in these
engagements two company commanders (Captains Smith and Koath) were wounded.
Then, on April 20, the 4th Royal West Kents and attached troops, still in good
heart though utterly battle-weary, were relieved by the 1st Royal, Berkshire
Regiment and driven back to Dimapur. Since April 5 they had successfully
resisted no less than twenty-five major Japanese attacks, during which more than
250 enemy soldiers were seen to be killed. Sixty-one members of the battalion
had been killed in action, thirteen were missing, and 125 had been wounded.

Well might Donald Easten write this passage years afterwards, when the
memories had begun to fade and the scene to grow blurred:

"But the greatest honours are due to Tommy Atkins. He had
fought for six months in Arakan, they had flown him to Dimapur, marched him up
to Kohima, marched him back again. Then back once more to Kohima, where he was
shot at as he got out of his trucks. He fought hand-to-hand battles practically
every night, and his pals were shot down all round him. If he was wounded, he
had no hope of evacuation. Day after day he was promised relief which never
came; and his platoon, or section, or just 'gang' got smaller and smaller. My
own company finished up twenty-five strong; one platoon consisted of a single
grinning private, who asked if he could put a pip up. And Tommy Atkins did all
that on half a mug of liquid every twenty-four hours."